Oct 31, 2011 (The Monitor/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- Allan, a BA. Economics student at Makerere University, had a Math exam coming up in two weeks. But he had fallen back on his revision, he says, and feared he would not be able to work through the stack of problems he had in time for the exam. The best solution was to get someone more prepared take him through them but all the people he approached declined. Frustrated, he turned to Google and that's when he came across khanacademy.org.
Using Khan Academy's educational videos on YouTube, he was able to work through matrix algebra and differentiation, the course unit's cornerstones, in four hours. Created in 2006 by Salman Khan, the Khan Academy is a not-for-profit educational project that supplies free educational videos on its website and YouTube channel.
The 2, 600 tutorials, narrated by Mr Khan himself, cover a wide range of subjects from mathematics, chemistry, biology, computer science, economics to finance, and cater to kids just learning to add as well as university students. "It was like I was in a lecture," Allan said. "What made it better is that I could pause to digest the material, which you can't do in class. The guy saved me from failing."
Innovative resources
Khan Academy is just one of many innovative and self-paced online resources now used by thousands of students all over the globe, Allan for example, to aid them in their revision. While Khan concentrates on pre-university content, a number of universities have also put their content online to be accessed freely by anyone interested.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), one of the most prestigious universities in the world, has since 2002 shared 2,000 courses over the internet. Other universities, among them UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins and a number of Japanese and Chinese universities, have followed suit. These resources usually include video lectures, tests and discussions of some of the content.
In advanced nations, especially the US where the trend seems to be most popular, initiatives like the Khan Academy have triggered discussions about the future of education.
Offering high quality educational material (Khan has three degrees from MIT and a Harvard MBA), they will, if fully embraced by teachers and schools, free up teachers to focus on instruction (the lecturing having been provided by Khan and co) and co-curricular activities. Even better, they will bridge the gap between poor schools and the more selective ones.
Ugandan challenge
Locally, our cash-strapped and poorly equipped universities have everything to gain by embracing these groundbreaking developments. At Makerere, Prof. Sandy Stevens Tickodri-Togboa--Deputy Vice Chancellor Finance and Administration-- is in charge of iLABS, a collaboration with MIT. The project was launched in 2002 to develop online laboratories that supplement conventional laboratories.
"It is a framework that enables us to access equipment from MIT's labs through the internet," Prof. Tickodri-Togboa says of the project. Initially, the university exclusively used MIT's labs but "two or three years later, after a lot of interaction, we started developing our own equipment." Prof. Tickodri-Togboa says Makerere University was able to access contemporary technology it could not afford on it's own through the project. From Makerere, the acquired knowledge and skills have been spread to secondary schools. Pilot projects were introduced in Gayaza High School and St. Mary's College Kisubi.
At the beginning of this year, a competition was held to determine which of the two schools had adopted the technology better. It involved programming robots to use cranes to carry out various activities, and Gayaza beat Kisubi. Uganda Christian University, Mukono, too, started hosting a local copy of MIT's educational materials in 2010 and, in the same spirit of openness, invites educators from around Uganda to utilise them.
In addition to OpenCourseWare, as initiatives like MIT's are known, a number of other online resources are in use globally. Most people visit YouTube, the world's most popular video-sharing website, to view cat and music videos but it is also a rich repository of university lectures. Professors from elite universities like Yale and Harvard have uploaded their lectures onto the website.
Within easy reach
Although not yet available in Uganda, iTunes U distributes educational audio, video and PDF files for students within their institutions and publicly. (But, like all things Apple, you have to buy the material through its store).
Meanwhile, Learning Management Systems (LMS) like Blackboard, Moodle and KEWL, software packages that administer instructor-led and e-learning courses and help keep track of student progress, have been embraced by Makerere University.
An LMS makes it possible for teachers to manage large numbers of students, fellow lectures and courses as well as utilise online forums. Online registration, which is now the preferred option at Makerere, is part of these systems. At Makerere's School of Computing and Informatics Technology, students can download notes using the Moodle-hosted MUELE (Makerere University E-Learning Environment) and usually have their test results posted on the platform.
In the developed world the question is whether online technology will make teachers less necessary, with just a few tutors needed to guide students, hence bringing down education costs.
Uganda and other developing countries, hampered by poor infrastructure, still need teachers. Still, we have a lot to gain; like Prof. Tickodri-Togboa pointed out, online collaborations whose only cost is a decent internet connection have helped the university develop skills and its technology.
Copyright The Monitor. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). by Raymond Mpubani
Mpumbani, R. (2011, October 31). Learning from the internet [opinion]. Retrieved March 18, 2012, from Opposing viewpoints in context: http://0-ic.galegroup.com.library.hct.ac.ae/ic/ovic/NewsDetailsPage/NewsDetailsWindow?displayGroupName=News&disableHighlighting=false&prodId=OVIC&action=e&windowstate=normal&catId=&documentId=GALE%7CA271224341&mode=view
Learning from the Internet [opinion]
Oct 31, 2011 (The Monitor/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- Allan, a BA. Economics student at Makerere University, had a Math exam coming up in two weeks. But he had fallen back on his revision, he says, and feared he would not be able to work through the stack of problems he had in time for the exam. The best solution was to get someone more prepared take him through them but all the people he approached declined. Frustrated, he turned to Google and that's when he came across khanacademy.org.
Using Khan Academy's educational videos on YouTube, he was able to work through matrix algebra and differentiation, the course unit's cornerstones, in four hours. Created in 2006 by Salman Khan, the Khan Academy is a not-for-profit educational project that supplies free educational videos on its website and YouTube channel.
The 2, 600 tutorials, narrated by Mr Khan himself, cover a wide range of subjects from mathematics, chemistry, biology, computer science, economics to finance, and cater to kids just learning to add as well as university students. "It was like I was in a lecture," Allan said. "What made it better is that I could pause to digest the material, which you can't do in class. The guy saved me from failing."
Innovative resources
Khan Academy is just one of many innovative and self-paced online resources now used by thousands of students all over the globe, Allan for example, to aid them in their revision. While Khan concentrates on pre-university content, a number of universities have also put their content online to be accessed freely by anyone interested.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), one of the most prestigious universities in the world, has since 2002 shared 2,000 courses over the internet. Other universities, among them UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins and a number of Japanese and Chinese universities, have followed suit. These resources usually include video lectures, tests and discussions of some of the content.
In advanced nations, especially the US where the trend seems to be most popular, initiatives like the Khan Academy have triggered discussions about the future of education.
Offering high quality educational material (Khan has three degrees from MIT and a Harvard MBA), they will, if fully embraced by teachers and schools, free up teachers to focus on instruction (the lecturing having been provided by Khan and co) and co-curricular activities. Even better, they will bridge the gap between poor schools and the more selective ones.
Ugandan challenge
Locally, our cash-strapped and poorly equipped universities have everything to gain by embracing these groundbreaking developments. At Makerere, Prof. Sandy Stevens Tickodri-Togboa--Deputy Vice Chancellor Finance and Administration-- is in charge of iLABS, a collaboration with MIT. The project was launched in 2002 to develop online laboratories that supplement conventional laboratories.
"It is a framework that enables us to access equipment from MIT's labs through the internet," Prof. Tickodri-Togboa says of the project. Initially, the university exclusively used MIT's labs but "two or three years later, after a lot of interaction, we started developing our own equipment."
Prof. Tickodri-Togboa says Makerere University was able to access contemporary technology it could not afford on it's own through the project. From Makerere, the acquired knowledge and skills have been spread to secondary schools. Pilot projects were introduced in Gayaza High School and St. Mary's College Kisubi.
At the beginning of this year, a competition was held to determine which of the two schools had adopted the technology better. It involved programming robots to use cranes to carry out various activities, and Gayaza beat Kisubi. Uganda Christian University, Mukono, too, started hosting a local copy of MIT's educational materials in 2010 and, in the same spirit of openness, invites educators from around Uganda to utilise them.
In addition to OpenCourseWare, as initiatives like MIT's are known, a number of other online resources are in use globally. Most people visit YouTube, the world's most popular video-sharing website, to view cat and music videos but it is also a rich repository of university lectures. Professors from elite universities like Yale and Harvard have uploaded their lectures onto the website.
Within easy reach
Although not yet available in Uganda, iTunes U distributes educational audio, video and PDF files for students within their institutions and publicly. (But, like all things Apple, you have to buy the material through its store).
Meanwhile, Learning Management Systems (LMS) like Blackboard, Moodle and KEWL, software packages that administer instructor-led and e-learning courses and help keep track of student progress, have been embraced by Makerere University.
An LMS makes it possible for teachers to manage large numbers of students, fellow lectures and courses as well as utilise online forums. Online registration, which is now the preferred option at Makerere, is part of these systems. At Makerere's School of Computing and Informatics Technology, students can download notes using the Moodle-hosted MUELE (Makerere University E-Learning Environment) and usually have their test results posted on the platform.
In the developed world the question is whether online technology will make teachers less necessary, with just a few tutors needed to guide students, hence bringing down education costs.
Uganda and other developing countries, hampered by poor infrastructure, still need teachers. Still, we have a lot to gain; like Prof. Tickodri-Togboa pointed out, online collaborations whose only cost is a decent internet connection have helped the university develop skills and its technology.
Copyright The Monitor. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).
by Raymond Mpubani